“I look forward to working with Governor LePage, from the federal level, to help create a climate in which our small businesses can thrive, giving a much-needed boost to our state’s economy, and restoring Mainers’ trust in government.”

“Tell them to kiss my butt. If they want, they can look at my family picture. My son happens to be black, so they can do whatever they’d like about it.”

Day 13, January 17: LePage attends a Martin Luther King Jr breakfast in Waterville, much to the surprise of those in attendance. While the breakfast starts at 7:30, the governor’s spokes team do not release a press statement until the event is well underway.

Included in this list of recommendations, labeled “Phase One,” are provisions which would essentially overturn the Kid-Safe Products Act, passed in 2008, which prevents manufacturers from using some of the most dangerous toxic chemicals in products that come into contact with children.Also targeted is Maine’s recently passed product stewardship law, which is designed to make manufacturers repsonsible for the cost of the disposal of hazardous substances found electronic waste, rather than Maine taxpayers.

When LePage hesitated to submit his budget to the Maine legislature, the MDP on Day 37 (February 10) challenged him to do so.

Chairman Ben Grant’s Statement on Governor LePage’s Budget Address:

Governor LePage needs to realize that the campaign is over, and that Maine people need a governor who will give them a clear picture of how the state will move forward. Instead, the governor offered more overheated rhetoric to his 38% of the state, but nothing to the 62% of Maine that doesn’t want an extreme approach to governing.

LePage is not a candidate anymore, he’s the governor – so it’s time for him to start presenting a positive outlook. Our economy will be helped by smart investments, not by doom and gloom headlines. Maine won’t make any progress if we govern based on Tea Party stereotypes.

When the proposed budget is released, the Governor will have to come clean with the people of Maine about exactly what essential services will be decimated. Governor LePage made some expensive promises today, without leveling with Mainers about how he plans to pay for them.

Along with the public hearings came numerous and extraordinarily well-attended rallies. Unions. Teachers. State workers. Civil rights groups. Clean Elections supporters. Senior citizens. Others, too many to count or remember, frankly.

Thousands of Mainers across the political spectrum bonded together to stand firm and protest Governor LePage’s proposals, time and time again.

I am reminded by these events of the great Civil Rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer who said, “I am sick and tired of being sick and tired.” I am sick and tired of the crude disrespectful remarks of this governor. I don’t like him telling any president to go to hell. I am outraged that he would call the NAACP an “interest group” and tell them to “kiss his butt.” I am sick and tired of his sexist remarks like those about the dangerous chemical additive BPA, that it might cause a few women to grow beards — so what’s the big deal? He said he hadn’t seen the science on BPA — he hadn’t seen it because he’s incapable of understanding it — except as it effects the bottom line of its manufacturer. And he obviously has no idea of the difference between estrogen and testosterone. Poor man.

On Day 69 (March 14) LePage sent out a press release, threatening a veto if his budget was not passed by the Legislature intact. The following day, the Maine Democratic Party issued a press release of their own, blasting the Governor and quoting Republicans that now were finding themselves in an awkward spot:

“We are now in the position that we are going to need a two-thirds budget so we are going to do our best to negotiate a budget that takes his concerns into account…but we are not drawing any lines in the sand,” said Senate Majority Leader Jonathan Courtney, R-Springvale.

Day 71 (March 16): It was reported that Maine author Stephen King lambasted Govs LePage, Walker and Scott, referring to the trio as ”The Three Stooges” in Florida.

The Maine Senate today voted unanimously to begin phasing out the chemical bidphenol-A, or BPA, from children’s products such as baby bottles and sippy cups, the Lewiston Sun Journal reports. The vote follows a strong endorsement for the bill in the Maine House, which approved it last week by a vote of 145-3.The ban, proposed under Maine’s Kid-Safe Products Act, was initially opposed by Gov. Paul LePage, who made national headlines when he joked that the worst effect of the chemical would be to cause women to grow “little beards.” LePage later dropped his opposition.

WOW. Talk about a “no confidence” vote against Governor LePage! And that leads us to our last entry:

“Mainers are looking for leaders who solve problems, not ones who needlessly create them”

Maine voters sent a message to Augusta last fall to fix our ailing economy and create good paying jobs. After 100 days in office, it is clear that the LePage administration did not receive the message. For 100 days, Maine has been subjected to a nonsense agenda full of distractions and embarrassments that has left Mainers from Caribou to Kittery outraged. From rolling back child labor laws to putting chemicals back into baby bottles to confiscating a historical Labor mural, Governor LePage has embarrassed the state and even caused Republicans to issue a public rebuke.

61% of Maine people voted for a common sense, responsible government last fall, but Governor LePage insists on governing only for the 39% who demand an extreme, conservative and divisive approach. 100 days of distractions and pointless legislation are 100 days too many. Mainers are looking for leaders who solve problems, not ones who needlessly create them.”